The Endless War

Nobody knows when, or even why, the war started. All they knew was that it had been going on for generations. For as long as their histories stretched, the Varakai and the Xel’Tharim had been fighting one another. Their war spanned countless millennia, consuming stars, worlds, numerous civilizations, entire solar systems. It was not a war for resources, nor ideology. It wasn’t even a war for the expansion of the respective empires. It was simply war, forged into the very fabric of each species’ existence, passed down like an inheritance of blood.

The Varakai, an insectoid species with chitinous armor and bioengineered weaponry, viewed the war as sacred. Their ancient scriptures, passed down through generations of warrior priests and scribes, spoke of an eternal conflict decreed by the long-extinct Elder Queens, the original rulers of their planet and species. To fight was to fulfill the will of their ancestors, to prove their worthiness in the eyes of destiny.

The Xel’Tharim, a race of towering cephalopod-Like beings with luminous, shifting skin and minds capable of bending reality, saw the war as something else entirely. To them, it was a cycle, a fundamental law of existence. Their prophets spoke of the Great Pattern, an ever-turning wheel of creation and destruction. Peace was nothing more than an illusion. The only true constant in the universe was war and conflict.

And so, the fighting never ceased. Star systems burned in battles that lasted centuries. Some planets had been fought over so many times that their surfaces were unrecognizable, reshaped by weapons that had cracked their land masses. Entire civilizations and species, neither Varakai or Xel’Tharim, had been annihilated for their allegiances or, in some instances, just existing in the great war’s path.

There were no negotiations, no ceasefires, no treaties, no attempts at peace. If either side had ever sought to understand the other, that knowledge had long since been buried under eons of rumble and generations of bloodshed.

On the war ravaged world of Kel-Varesh, another battle had just ended. The once-thriving colony was now nothing more than a graveyard, its atmosphere thick with smoke, the land scorched by countless bombardments from orbital weaponry. Varakai and Xel-Tharim forces had clashed here for weeks, neither willing to relinquish an inch of ground to the other. But in the end, both fleets had been destroyed, leaving only two surviving fighter pilots that had crashed on the planet’s surface.

Commander Sharkar Var’Zuun of the Varakai pulled himself from the wreckage of his crashed fighter, his rugged battle exoskeleton cracked, his secondary arms broken and mangled at his sides. He smelled the burning remains of his weapons officer, his body reduced to a smoldering husk. His pulse quickened with rage. His only instinct, his sole reason for existing was to fight, to kill, to fulfill the purpose ingrained into his very being since he was birthed. That’s when he saw her.

Captain Althira Nex of the Xel-Tharim stood among the ruins, her elongated form shifting with subtle bioluminescent pulses. Her tendrils curled around her in a defensive posture, her telepathic abilities probing the ruins for any sign of remaining threats. Like him, she was alone on this now-barren planet.

For a long moment, neither moved. Millennia of war dictated that they should strike each other down without hesitation. Yet, exhaustion had settled in on both of them. Their armies had been obliterated. Their weapons had been spent. Their ships reduced to nothing more than burning debris raining down from the heavens. For the first in ages, a Varakai and a Xel-Tharim faced each other, not as soldiers engaged in battle, but as survivors stranded on the same deserted, ruined world.

Days passed. The first was spent in absolute silence, each keeping their distance, watching the other for any sign of an impending attack. The second, testing the opposition for any weakness that could be used to end this standoff. By the third, they both acknowledged their unspoken truce. They needed to survive, and that could happen if they helped each other. Or at the very least, weren’t consumed with the other’s destruction. Food was scarce, the planet’s ecosystem poisoned by centuries of war. They scavenged what little they could from the wreckage of the war machines around them, their survival instincts momentarily stronger than their inherited hatred for the other. On the tenth day, they found The Archive.

Buried beneath the ruins of a once-great city, it was a vault of ancient data, so old that neither of their species should have been able to understand it. And yet, the symbols were eerily familiar to both of them. On a podium in front of them, there were two touch pads, one in the shape of each of their hands. They exchanged an unsure glance as the reached out towards the panel. Together, they activated the massive machine in front of them. A holographic figure flickered to life, its form neither Varakai nor Xel’Tharim. Instead, it belonged to a species neither of them instantly recognized, a long-thought extinct race that had vanished an untold number of eons ago. Then it spoke. The language was from neither of their empires, yet they both understood it perfectly.

“To those that remain, we leave this recording as testimony. We were the Vorni, the architects of an empire that spanned the known universe. We created the Varakai and the Xel’Tharim, brought them together to be allies, bound to each other by unity and servitude. But as we basked in the glow of our creation, we grew arrogant. We sought to control them, shape the course of their futures. And in doing so, we did the unspeakable. We turned them against each other for our own selfish and small-minded reasons.”

The two beleaguered warriors looked at each other then back at the hologram in bewilderment.

“We erased their histories,” the hologram continued, “sowed false memories of betrayal, and set them on a path of endless war and destruction. Why you may ask? For our own entertainment. Two species, pitted against one another for the viewing pleasure of our populace. Because it was easier to rule them as enemies than as allies. But in our arrogance, we did not foresee the destruction of our own world, the annihilation of our species.”

Neither Althira Nex nor Sharkar Var’Zuun could believe what they were hearing. Yet somehow, they knew the words were true.

“Now, we are gone. And yet, the war continues. If you are seeing this, then know the truth: the was never yours. It was never meant to last. You fight each other for a ghost’s deception.”

And just as quickly as it had the started, the message ended and the hologram disappeared. Silence fell on the chamber around Sahara and Althira like a bomb, a silence heavier than the weight of the ruined planet they found themselves marooned on. Everything they had known, been taught their whole lives, every battle, every death, every sacrifice had been built on a lie. They stood together, unable to muster the words to describe what they had just learned. Then they turned to face each other, a lifetime of taught hate bubbling over like a cauldron on an open fire. But instead of attacking, a Varakai and a Xel’Tharim embraced for the first time in either’s known history.

For them, standing in that chamber, the war was over. There was no need to fight. But the war was bigger than them. It had consumed the lives of their species for generations. Brought about the destruction of entire civilizations. They both knew they had a sacred duty to deliver this information to their people. But would their people believe them? Would they want to believe? As the ruins of Kel-Varesh burned around them, they knew that knowledge alone was not enough. The war was all either planet had ever known. Could the truth end it? Or had the hatred created by a long dead race of beings become so real, so forged into the souls of their species that it could never be undone?

The Observer

She didn’t want to be in love. Her kind fell in love only once, and heartbreak could be fatal. Yet, despite the warnings ringing in her head, she couldn’t resist the magnetic pull the first time she laid eyes on him.

His name was David and he was unlike anyone she had ever met. His smile, his laughter, the way his eyes sparkled with life – it all drew her in like a moth to a flame. She watched him from afar, hiding in the shadows of the bustling city around them.

She had come to Earth on a mission to study human behavior, but she never expected to become entangled in the complexities of human emotions. She observed David’s life, his friends, and his routines, all while keeping her identity a secret.

One fateful day, as she was watching him play catch with his nephews in the park, David approached her. It was a quiet afternoon in the city, the kind of day where the sun painted golden patterns through the leaves and the air carried the faint scent of blooming flowers. She sat alone on a weathered wooden bench, her fingers idly tracing the ridges in the wood. She wasn’t supposed to be here – not like this, not among them. But curiosity had drawn her in, stronger than any warning from her superiors. She had been watching them, these humans, studying their laughter, their conversations, their casual touches. They were so open with their emotions, so unguarded. It fascinated her. She was so captivated by them that she didn’t notice him at first, not until he sat down beside her.

“Nice day huh?” He said, stretching his arms over the back of the bench. She turned her head slightly, just enough to see him out of the corner of her eye. He had warm brown eyes, a casual smile, and a presence that radiated a kind of easy confidence.

“”I suppose,” she answered carefully.

“You don’t sound convinced.” He chuckled, tilting his head as if trying to read her expression. “First time here?” She hesitated. She had spent months blending in, learning the nuances of human speech and movement, but she never expected to noticed – let alone engaged in conversation.

“You could say that,” she meekly replied after a few moments. “Hi, I’m David.” He extended his hand towards her. A simple gesture, yet she briefly hesitated.Physical touch was a level of intimacy that her people reserved for their mates. But I came here to understand them, didn’t I? So she placed her hand in his. “Have I seen you around her before?” She softly shrugged her shoulders as she stared down at her feet. His warmth pleasantly surprised her. A rush of something unfamiliar unfurled in her chest. She quickly pulled her hand away, hoping not to insult his friendliness. David seemed to not notice.

“You got a name?” He asked, still smiling at her. For a split second, she considered lying. A false identity would be safer. But before she could give it further thought, she blurted out, “Zara.”

“Nice to meet you, Zara.” They exchanged smiles again and leaned back on the bench to watch as life in the park went on around them. Silence stretched out between them, but it wasn’t uncomfortable. David seemed to content to just sit there, watching the people pass by. She studied him out of the corner of her eye. Something about him unsettled her. Not in a way that made her feel threatened – but in a way that made her feel seen.

“So,” he said after a while, “what brings you to the park today?” She searched for an answer that wouldn’t reveal too much. His friendly nature and genuine curiosity about her drew her in. “I like watching people.” A small sense of pride poured over her. He laughed. “That’s not creepy at all.” She frowned. “It’s not meant to be.”

“I’m just messing with you,” he said, nudging her lightly with his elbow. The casual contact sent another ripple through her whole body. She had spent so much time observing humans from the shadows, but now, sitting next to one – talking to one – she realized something she hadn’t before. Being near him felt different. Being seen by him felt different. And for the first time since she arrived on Earth, she wasn’t just studying humans. She was experiencing them.

David stood up, stretched, and waved at his nephews. “Well Zara, I think I’ll be coming back to this park more often. Maybe I’ll see you again.” She watched him walk away, her pounding against her chest in a way that had nothing to do with fear. She hadn’t come here looking for a connection. She knew she couldn’t afford it. But something told her she would be coming back to the park too.

Days turned into weeks then months, her and David’s connection deepened. She learned about his dreams, his fears, and his past. She shared stories of her home planet, which fascinated David. Their conversations flowed effortlessly, transcending the boundaries of species. As their friendship grew stronger, so did her feelings for David. She knew the danger of falling in love, the risk it posed to her very existence. But she couldn’t help herself, love was an irresistible force that pulled her closer to David with each passing day.

One evening, under the vast expanse of a star filled sky, David confessed his love for her. She hesitated, torn between her feelings for him and the immense weight of the potential consequences. But she couldn’t deny her heart any longer, and professed her love for him too. Their love was unconventional, to say the least. Her alien physiology and vulnerability to heartbreak made their relationship fragile, yet filled with passion and depth that neither of them could have imagined. One night beneath the soft glow of the moon, her and David lay side by side, their fingers intertwined. The night air was warm, filled with the quiet hum of the city in the distance. But in this moment, they were in a world of their own. She traced gentle patterns along David’s arm, marveling at the warmth of his skin. She had studied humans for most of her adult life, observed their behaviors, their emotions. But feeling him beneath her fingertips was different. It was real, it was terrifying.

“Are you afraid?” David asked softly, his voice a whisper against the nightlife around them. She turned to face him, her luminous eyes reflecting the starlight. “Yes,” she admitted, “But not of you.”

His hand came up cup her cheek, his thumb brushing against her skin. “The what?” She exhaled, her breath shaky. “Of this. Of what I feel for you. My kind, we love only once. And if we lose that love…” She hesitated, afraid to say the words aloud. David’s expression softened with understanding. He pulled her closer, his lips brushing against her forehead. “Then I won’t let you lose me,” he murmured in between the soft kisses he planted on her cheeks. The space between them disappeared as he kissed her softly at first, as if testing the fragile boundary between them. But when she responded, pressing her body against his, the tenderness melted away, leaving something deeper, something more electric.

She gasped as sensations overwhelmed her. Her species was not accustomed to touch in the way humans were; their emotions were felt on a level so intense that even the slightest brush of skin to skin contact could send ripples of lust through them. And David was like fire against her skin. He moved with care, his hands exploring, learning her body with reverence. Every touch sent waves of passion through her, and she responded in kind, letting herself give in to the instinct, to the connection that had been building between them since the moment they met.

As they came together, she felt something unlike anything she had ever know. A merging of more than just bodies, but of souls, of something ancient and powerful that transcended species, planets, the differences between them, and even logic itself. David held her through it all, his touch grounding her as her body trembled with the force of her passion erupting. When it was over, they remained wrapped in each other’s arms, their breath mingling in the stillness around them. She pressed her forehead to his, her fingers tracing the lines of his face as if trying to memorize every detail. “Now I know,” she whispered.

“Know what?” David asked, his voice still laced with the remnants of their passion. She smiled, brushing a kiss against his lips. “That love isn’t meant to be feared.”

But as their love grew, so did the danger. Her commander discovered her emotional entanglement with a human, and warned of the danger it posed. Her heart, already filled to brim with love for David, now bore the weight of an impossible choice. She stood at the edge of the rooftop, gazing up at the night sky. The stars shimmered like distant memories, calling her home. Behind her, David stood in silence, waiting for her to speak. She had been quiet since receiving the transmission from High Command.

“They want me to return home,” she finally said, her voice barely above a whisper. David swallowed hard. He had known this moment could come, but that didn’t make it any easier. “What happens if you don’t go?”

She turned to face him, her luminous eyes filled with something between fear and longing. “Defiance isn’t taken lightly among my kind. If I refuse, I may never be allowed to go back home. I would be exiled, forever.” David stepped closer, his hands gliding gently over her arms. “But if you go back, what happens to us?”

She closed her eyes. The thought of leaving him, of severing the bond they had built, was unbearable. If she left, if she couldn’t be with him, she would never love again. And without that love, her life would end shortly afterwards. She took his hand in hers and pressed it against her chest. “If I leave, I lose you. If I stay, I lose them,” her voice wavered, “Either way, I lose something.”

David cupped her face, his thumb tracing soft circles on her cheek. “Then stay,” he whispered, “Stay with me. We’ll make a life here, together.” She searched his eyes, feeling the depth of his love. A love that had defied every law of the universe. For the first time in her life, she made a choice not based on duty, not on fear, but on her heart.

“I’m staying,” she said, the words tasted like freedom to her. David pulled her into his arms, holding her tightly as if afraid she might disappear if he let go. She burrowed into his chest, as if she was reassuring him that she wouldn’t. She was his now, as much as he was hers. And as the stars watched from above, she turned her back on the life she once knew, choosing love over duty, the unknown over certainty, and a future that was truly hers to write. She knew the risks, but couldn’t imagine a life without David in it. Together, they faced the odds, navigating the uncharted waters of interspecies love. Their bond only strengthened as they defied the odds, proving that love could conquer even the greatest of challenges.